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#1
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Tom Nakashima wrote:
Looks like there's a mistake on the parachute cord in the photo. I've used a similar lanyard from Orvis that I got as a gift on two different occasions, and both times I managed to tangle. Some anglers swear by them, just don't work for me. FWIW, living where it's too hot for a vest much of the year, I've played around with making my own lanyards quite a bit. The best solution I found was to buy the hollow, stretchy "craft lace", and braid four strands of it together. This provides more stiffness than just using para cord, so the lanyard tends to hang away from your body a bit and tangle less. I used wooden beads for spacers, and large swivel snaps for tool holders. I played around with various methods of quick release attachments, but wasn't really happy until I found some "cord locs" that were the right size to hold the lanyard ends in a friction fit but release when they are tugged sharply. As Larry stated, you want something to attach the lanyard to your clothing so it doesn't swing out into your way every time you lean over. I used a mini carabiner on mine. The best part about them, IMHO, besides being cool, is that they force you to travel light. Chuck Vance (and that's also the *worst part about them) |
#2
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![]() "Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Tom Nakashima wrote: Looks like there's a mistake on the parachute cord in the photo. I've used a similar lanyard from Orvis that I got as a gift on two different occasions, and both times I managed to tangle. Some anglers swear by them, just don't work for me. FWIW, living where it's too hot for a vest much of the year, I've played around with making my own lanyards quite a bit. The best solution I found was to buy the hollow, stretchy "craft lace", and braid four strands of it together. This provides more stiffness than just using para cord, so the lanyard tends to hang away from your body a bit and tangle less. I used wooden beads for spacers, and large swivel snaps for tool holders. I played around with various methods of quick release attachments, but wasn't really happy until I found some "cord locs" that were the right size to hold the lanyard ends in a friction fit but release when they are tugged sharply. As Larry stated, you want something to attach the lanyard to your clothing so it doesn't swing out into your way every time you lean over. I used a mini carabiner on mine. The best part about them, IMHO, besides being cool, is that they force you to travel light. Chuck Vance (and that's also the *worst part about them) I haven't tried a clip to the shirt method yet, might be worth a try. thanks for the info on the homemade lanyard version. -tom |
#3
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On Jan 22, 8:50 am, Conan The Librarian wrote:
As Larry stated, you want something to attach the lanyard to your clothing so it doesn't swing out into your way every time you lean over. I used a mini carabiner on mine. ....ok, this is a good point. I first started wearing lanyards when bonefishing....when vests are totally stupid. But an exposed lanyard can be a disaster: maybe you've been stalking the flats for hours and all of sudden you see it: a V of ephemeral shadows coming your way from 300 feet off. You strip out some line, false cast close to the water once an then shoot out 70' of line, but oh **** oh dear, your slack fly line just snagged your hemostats on the lanyard. This trip cost 7 grand and............. So I wear a good synthetic (breathable) undershirt underneath everthing, with a nice LL-Bean or whoever fishing shirt, with breathable arm pits and big chest pockets on top, with the lanyard underneath my shirt. Now I've got exactly what I wanted: everything close at hand and no damn vest a no kind. |
#4
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On Tue, 22 Jan 2008 17:15:01 -0800 (PST), while-one
wrote: On Jan 22, 8:50 am, Conan The Librarian wrote: As Larry stated, you want something to attach the lanyard to your clothing so it doesn't swing out into your way every time you lean over. I used a mini carabiner on mine. ...ok, this is a good point. I first started wearing lanyards when bonefishing....when vests are totally stupid. But an exposed lanyard can be a disaster: maybe you've been stalking the flats for hours and all of sudden you see it: a V of ephemeral shadows coming your way from 300 feet off. You strip out some line, false cast close to the water once an then shoot out 70' of line, but oh **** oh dear, your slack fly line just snagged your hemostats on the lanyard. This trip cost 7 grand and............. So I wear a good synthetic (breathable) undershirt underneath everthing, with a nice LL-Bean or whoever fishing shirt, with breathable arm pits and big chest pockets on top, with the lanyard underneath my shirt. Now I've got exactly what I wanted: everything close at hand and no damn vest a no kind. I second all of that - but my bone-feesh gear is simply lightweight quick-dry fishing pants and a flats shirt with lots o' pockets (I have some Columbia ones and some Patagonia ones). Nippers go on a retractable, everything else goes in the multitude of pockets. No undershirt or lanyard required... /daytripper (mmm....just thinking of flats fishing is warming me up) |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Flys on a Lanyard. | B J Conner | Fly Fishing | 9 | May 24th, 2004 04:59 PM |
Lanyard question | Conan The Librarian | Fly Fishing | 14 | May 13th, 2004 02:36 PM |